I Never Knew Him – short story by Sha’Tara

I wanted to know him, but I never did. He worked for my parents at the house on the Island. That’s where I spent my time when I wasn’t in school, or college. Year after year. I grew up, he got older. I was raised by wolves, you know what that means. So he was my life. And now, they’re all gone. The wolves ate each other and died. He cared for them, though he cared for me too. But he was so careful around me, careful to always have somebody else with us, near us, a witness, so that should something untoward happen the wolves wouldn’t blame him, and eat him. I never blamed him for being careful; for protecting himself. And so, I never got to know him. He was just there. And then like that, and suddenly, he wasn’t. I won’t try to explain in words what it means for a nineteen year old girl to be left adrift and alone after swimming her entire life with sharks and being forced to hunt with wolves. I didn’t like either roles and I did try to pretend I was an exception, an actual human being. Perhaps being alone now, completely out of the limelight, rich, and with only one uncle as guardian who’s barely aware of my existence, I can finally become what I was born to be.

In the back of my mind, there is an image, or perhaps it’s a mirage. A blue-green sea casts its waves upon a dull white sandy shore. Palm trees move in the afternoon breeze blowing all along that shore. Sometimes I see a woman with a young boy walking on the sand. The boy bends over frequently to pick up things. Once I watched him from the house’s balcony. He was picking up starfish and flinging them back into the waves. The woman, probably his mother, or guardian, walked on ahead slowly, oblivious of the stranded starfish. It reminded me then of a story you’ve all heard; a story that haunts me today. It’s about a little girl frantically running up and down a beach after a storm, picking up starfish and flinging them out to sea. A man, watching her, came to her and said, “There are so many stranded, you can only save a few. What difference can it possibly make?” To which the wise girl replied, as she flung another into the waves, “It makes a difference to that one.”

It’s easy to forget that lesson. I’m nineteen, what do I know of life? I know how to use money to get what I want. But do I know what I want? That’s the problem: I don’t, not really. Sometimes, I think bitterly, if I were a Barbie doll, I could buy myself friends, maybe even a boy friend. But I’m much, much less than a popular doll. I’m a rich no-one.

Even in summer, there are storms. Sometimes the waves are deep and as they approach the shallows, rise in high combers, or surf, thundering all along the shoreline. On such occasions I like to run down to the shore and stand just out of reach of the surf as it crashes, runs up the beach, then slithers back. I walk barefoot and bare-legged through the pushing and pulling roiling waters. Of course I’m looking for answers. And in those brief moment I get to put my loneliness on pause. When I see a starfish on the shore I pick it up and throw it back in the waters, hoping it will not be washed up again. Yes, hoping. Then I think about my life, beyond its hellish peacefulness and dulling emptiness. And how it keeps getting washed up on the shore and is as helpless as the starfish to do anything about it.

I asked him once about loneliness. He’d noticed it in me and I know it made him sad that a young girl could be so alone in the world. I asked how he could live there, in that house, alone year after year. He’d explain that he didn’t just stay there. He had family and friends among the fishermen in the village. I wanted to go with him to meet his friends, or to make my own friends in the village but my parents forbade it. They’re not our kind of people, said my mother. You could be kidnapped for ransom, said my father. The house is safe, and there’s enough space on the estate for you to wander through without danger. We’ll get you a horse, and a trainer. I didn’t want a horse.

Do you have any idea how lonely it is to be property; to be an estate slave with no purpose whatsoever but to fill a void in someone else’s life; a convenience, a trophy, even if never first prize being of wrong gender? If you ever feel truly alone you want to go down to the sea shore when the wind tears up the clouds as they whip over the half moon, say around midnight, and you want to sit on a wet rock to just listen to the waves crashing in, one after another, and between each one, listen to the water hissing back down into the roiling darkness. That is the sound, and the feeling, of the heartbeat of the lonely; the truly lonely. That is the heartbreaking echoes of loneliness.

If only I could give my life a purpose. Join the throngs of others going on about their business of struggle and survival. Using my own wits instead of my cursed inheritance of family money. Using my own hands to create, or just make, something. Maybe sit down beside a homeless woman and try to feel what she feels.

These are my thoughts today. You see, it was his funeral yesterday and I’m just now beginning to realize how truly lost-lonely I am. I would like to do something outrageous right now, but my mother said, they’re not our kind, and my father, it’s too dangerous. And the only person I ever trusted, ever loved, was buried yesterday. I couldn’t even attend his funeral, I was afraid.

Thank you for the comment. I’ve been so busy lately I haven’t had time to respond with any decent comments to almost anyone. Anyway, I’m glad (well in a way) that my attempt at creating a blip emotive short story that remains “lost” in a realm neither time nor space-specific seems to work. I noticed a couple of typos in there I have to go over and fix… I’ve enjoyed your posts on “We Come From Dreams” as well.

Understood, perhaps more than I know; been busy trying to put together a readable eptiome of Gaston Bachelard’s work, which is crazy-making. Like any good French writer, he’s colorful, he’s prolix, but without those two qualities he’d be boring. I do believe that he’d like this story. And though comparisons are often invidious, it does remind me somewhat of Edgar Allan Poe’s ‘Island of the Fey,’ which I just happen to have in me at a Blogger which I keep: http://literateurdelamour.blogspot.com/2016/02/island-of-fey-edgar-allan-poe.html

Arghh! Ya got me! A typo! A typo! *bangs head on desk* You’re welcome indeed. That Blogger of mine is a private treasure trove of Cool Stuff that I put together over a two month period. You’re certainly welcome to it. Among the gems in there (which have typos) are the ‘Epilogue’ to Aldous Huxley’s “The Devils of Loudun’ wherein he describes the one drug which ‘civilization’ condones: mob violence. (Well, all of that Cool Stuff has typos in it……) French stuff, well……I easily lose patience with Sartre; Voltaire is……okay sometimes; Condorcet had good ideas on language; Camus can be enjoyable, but I’ve not read enough of his work. And of course, there was de Sade. He’s in that Blogger somewhere. I have the .pdf’s of that Stuff for private distribution from a cloud service – that on request. I know that our email addresses are visible to each other but I don’t wanna go that way.

Invidious, huh? Well, that explains everything… Do you realize how much extra work you caused me, not to mention stress, in having to look up your big words? 🙂 Ok, note to self (are you listening? – I thought not) remember that “invidious” is now part of our vocabulary… at least until tomorrow noon. After that it’s another crap shoot. But beyond the invidious, sorry, meant to obvious, you do the French stuff too? I do some of that too, having been born over yonder the ocean blue, like a thousand years ago, but who’s counting. Literateur de l’amour… hmmmm… maybe I should have a look at that…
Anyway, thanks for the comment!!! ~me~

“with no purpose whatsoever but to fill a void in someone else’s life; a convenience, a trophy, even if never first prize being of wrong gender?” Only women know how it feels to be scared like only a woman can be scared, hurt like only a woman can be hurt, healed like only a woman can be healed. Long way around the bend but you made an excellent point. No chauvinistic man jive intended.